Impact of Local Microenvironments on the Selectivity of Electrocatalytic Nitrate Reduction in a BPM‐MEA System

Author:

Huang Po‐Wei1ORCID,Song Hakhyeon2,Yoo Jaeyoung3,Chipoco Haro Danae A.4ORCID,Lee Hyuck Mo3,Medford Andrew J.1,Hatzell Marta C.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332 USA

2. George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332 USA

3. Department of Materials Science and Engineering KAIST 291 Daehak‐ro, Yuseong‐gu Daejeon 34141 Republic of Korea

4. School of Materials Science and Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332 USA

5. George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332 USA

Abstract

AbstractElectrochemical nitrate reduction reaction (NO3RR) has garnered increasing attention as a pathway for converting a harmful pollutant (nitrate) into a value‐added product (ammonia). However, high selectivity toward ammonia (NH3) is imperative for process viability. Optimizing proton availability near the catalyst is important for achieving selective NH3 production. Here, the aim is to systematically examine the impacts of proton availability on NO3RR selectivity in a bipolar membrane (BPM)‐based membrane electrode assembly (MEA) system. The BPM generates a proton flux from the membrane toward the catalyst during electrolysis. Thus, the BPM‐MEA system can modulate the proton flux during operation. The impact of interposer layers, proton scavenging electrolytes (CO32−), and catalyst configurations are also examined to identify which local microenvironments favor ammonia formation. It is found that a moderate proton supply allows for an increase in ammonia yield by 576% when compared to the standard MEA setup. This also results in a high selectivity of 26 (NH3 over NO2) at an applied current density of 200 mA cm−2.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Directorate for Engineering

Publisher

Wiley

Reference53 articles.

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